NL

Besides Jason, another author that writes about the challenge of being a creative person in a similar way is Hugh MacLeod.

I credit his first book with helping me get my act together to start a company. And, he forced his publisher into letting you read most of it at: http://gapingvoid.com/ie/.

The GAP is not an easy thing to span…

GeeIWonder

on 30 Jun 12

Why is it its then it’s? and why is a guy who can’t get the basics down giving life advice?

Michael

on 30 Jun 12

GeelWonder, the poster was made by a designer who transcribed a portion of ann interview with Ira Glass, who is considered to be a successful public figure. Ira Glass would not make a mistake like that, and we are reading Glass’ words, not the designer’s.

LVNT

on 01 Jul 12

The message is much more inspiring than the design. I kept reading, trying to clear away the visual clutter.
And GeelWonder, where do you see an improper “its”? Surely you understand the usage of “its” vs. “it’s,” otherwise you wouldn’t have commented, right?

Devan

on 01 Jul 12

I agree that the ‘poster’ is a really bad design. Very hard to read and take away anything from that clutter of words that make your eyes jump all over the place.

Also, the wording itself seems a bit clumsy and seems to have an awkward measure, which doesn’t make them flow, nor stick in the memory at all.

GeeIWonder

on 02 Jul 12

@LVNT:
The ‘designer’ here has used both its and it’s for ‘it is’. That is the incorrect usage I was referring to. Plus it’s inconsistent. So it’s doubly wrong.

@Michael:
Point taken. But someone presumably took the trouble to type the thing up and ‘design’ fonts/layout to relay life advice and convey emphasis and do other graphic stuff that further tweak (and perhaps even change the meaning of) the original. And that someone, while clearly having an ability to randomize fonts, is missing the basics like command of the language the content is written in, and the ability to double check.

Terrence

on 02 Jul 12

@GeeWonder: By ‘presumably’ you mean ‘I presume’. Of course someone is ‘able to presume’. Freshman grammar mistake but why is a guy who can’t get the basics down giving grammar advice.

Anonymous Coward with Taste

on 02 Jul 12

“All of us who do creative work, we get into it because we have good taste”.

Right…

GeeIWonder

on 02 Jul 12

@Terrence – What?

Bisset usage. OED. But also Patono etc etc.

But goodness knows we all make grammar mistakes. Sometimes even on purpose—such as ‘Gonna’ above.

GeeIWonder

on 02 Jul 12

Here let me add an easy one for all the ‘freshmen’ level experts to play gotcha with:

Your not going to be hard pressed to find grammar errors. Even less so if you make up new rules (or misunderstand existing ones) about how some words can be used. And none of this, however, invalidates the original point.

i love it too. we need to stop comparing our amateur work with professionals, we learn from them so much that we always feel inadequate in hindsight, but the average person that needs our service often thinks we are the best, because they don’t see the flaws that we know are there, and we only know because we are always trying to be even better, really if you watch a dance team or ballet, or even a speech, the person makes mistakes but nobody notices except the other professionals – the average person doesn’t see the flaws because they are usually not an expert. My wife does excellent nail designs and everyone loves her work – but other nail techs come to her and they are very critical of her technique and watch very closely, but it is only because they know what to look for, the average client doesn’t care as long as the nails look great at the end.

so give yourself a break from your own critical eye, and just do a lot more work – practice, practice, practice – makes your work closer to perfect.

Michael

on 02 Jul 12

GeeIWonder, I completely agree the grammar errors and some aspects of the design are amateurish. I personally would link someone to the original interview with Ira Glass before I linked them to the image. But, I wouldn’t denigrate the words on the poster because of the design of the poster. I think we’re on the same page here.

Michael

on 02 Jul 12

Hah, I just noticed it’s “Gee I” and not “geel.” Sorry about earlier. I thought all these years that “Geel” was some unusual Dutch name.